4.8 Article

Lysosomal amino acid transporter SLC38A9 signals arginine sufficiency to mTORC1

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 347, Issue 6218, Pages 188-194

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1257132

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01 CA103866, AI47389, F30 CA180754, T32 GM007753, F31 AG044064, F31 CA180271]
  2. Department of Defense [W81XWH-07-0448]
  3. National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship
  4. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  5. American Cancer Society-Ellison Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship [PF-13-356-01-TBE]
  6. German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) Fellowship
  7. Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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The mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) protein kinase is a master growth regulator that responds to multiple environmental cues. Amino acids stimulate, in a Rag-, Ragulator-, and vacuolar adenosine triphosphatase-dependent fashion, the translocation of mTORC1 to the lysosomal surface, where it interacts with its activator Rheb. Here, we identify SLC38A9, an uncharacterized protein with sequence similarity to amino acid transporters, as a lysosomal transmembrane protein that interacts with the Rag guanosine triphosphatases (GTPases) and Ragulator in an amino acid-sensitive fashion. SLC38A9 transports arginine with a high Michaelis constant, and loss of SLC38A9 represses mTORC1 activation by amino acids, particularly arginine. Overexpression of SLC38A9 or just its Ragulator-binding domain makes mTORC1 signaling insensitive to amino acid starvation but not to Rag activity. Thus, SLC38A9 functions upstream of the Rag GTPases and is an excellent candidate for being an arginine sensor for the mTORC1 pathway.

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